Creating a website can be lots of fun. If you do it properly, you can even use it to earn money. This wikiHow will teach you not only how to create a website, but also how to earn money off of it.

In a Hurry?

The best way to earn money from a website is to find a niche target market like best tattoo designs, final exam study guides, or movie trailer critiques. Sign up for Google AdSense in order to receive money from ads on your page. Always make sure to update your website regularly with new content to keep your audience engaged. For suggestions on how to create a domain name and maximize your revenue, scroll down!

Steps

Method1

Create A Website

1

Define your goal. In order to attract any investors (in the form of advertisers) you must have a place for them to sell their wares. Attracting advertisers must be your primary goal, as that is what will make your financial aspirations a success.

Know what advertisers or ad placement algorithms are looking for in an advertising venue (i.e., your website): generally, it's potential buyers with disposable income who visit your site in significant numbers, and would be interested in products that are closely related to the content on your site.

What you want in a site, then, is to attract—and keep—a lot of visitors. The longer they stay, the more likely it is that they will eventually leave your site by clicking not on the back button, but on your advertiser's links.

2

Find a market. To generate the most traffic, and thus the most revenue, be selective in your target market. While every demographic has its strong points and weak points, studies have shown that younger people are generally more optimistic and more adventurous—and thus likely to click on an advertisement more readily.

Keep in mind that the goal is clicks, not sales: that's what generates your revenue. Once the visitor has clicked out of your site, it's up to the merchant to make the sale. You get paid, regardless of the outcome.

Search the web for trends and ideas for websites, and include the year in your search so that you avoid wasting search results on what was hot in 2006. For example, searching Google for "website ideas 2012" returned nearly a billion results. From there, it's just a matter of combing through to find ideas that pique your interest.

3

Secure a domain. In the halcyon days of the early 21st century, you could create a business name, and find a domain to match. These days, it's virtually impossible. However, you can be creative with hyphenated names. While "geeks.com" (and .net, .org, even .xxx) is taken, trying something like "website-4-g33ks" instead.

One good way to proceed is to secure a ".com" domain, find a host (many domain registrars will also host sites), and build your own site. This has the advantage of being the most flexible in terms of design and installation of custom code.

Alternately, you can sign up with a service such as Blogger, from Google, or Wordpress—both of which will not only let you put your site name in front of their service name (e.g., geeks.wordpress.com), they will give you that and a website for free. The advantage, aside from that, is that Blogger and Wordpress give you a great number of really well-designed templates to make your site look visually awesome. The downside is that generally takes having a "pro" version (i.e., paid for) before you can do any serious customizing.

4

Build your site. Using the templates provided, or a site of your own design (or from a designer), put together your website. What you do will be based almost entirely on the market you are attempting to reach. Again, though, whether you are ultimately offering a personal service, like "Cleavon's Auto Repair Site," or a total web-centric site like "Sara's Mouth-Watering Recipes," the goal is to keep people on your site. That means content is king—same as it ever was.

If you're offering a service, your site could have content specific to your specialty. Cleavon, for example, might have some basic articles on changing oil, fixing a flat, or a FAQ about all those little sounds a car might make. Sarah could feature, along with recipes, information such as weight and measure conversion, the differences between types of flours, and anecdotal tales of kitchen disasters and successes. In both cases, going beyond the basic service provided gives visitors a reason to stick around—and click on ads!

5

Keep it fresh. Don't post one or two articles and call it a day. Remember that this is your income stream we're talking about developing, so think of it as your job—part time or full time, you have to devote some time to it every day if you want to see the paychecks come rolling in.

The more you write, the more interest your site will hold. The more interest your site holds, the more people will follow it. and more importantly, the more relevant your site will appear to the ad placement algorithms. More ads = more clicks = more money. Never lose sight of that goal.

Method2

Start Advertising and Promotion

1

Sign up for Google AdSense. AdSense will place ads for goods and services that are relevant to your site's visitors, based on the content of your site. You get paid every time an ad appears on your site, or an ad is clicked on.

You get paid a very small amount for each impression (view) or click. Therefore, the more traffic you generate, the more clicks and impressions you will have, and the more money you will receive.

2

Promote your site. Every time you post, every time you make a change, every time you change a period to an exclamation mark or correct "teh" to "the," let the world know via Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and all the rest of the social media world. The key is to spread the word.

Have accounts on all of the above, and make sure you have prominent links to your website on all of them.

Start an email campaign as well. Once a week, publish a "best of my site" HTML email—frequent enough that people enjoy the content, but not so much that it becomes spammy.

3

Pay attention to your metrics. Find which ads work best, and do more ads and pages like those.

By continually refining your process, each visit will be a higher value for revenue generation. Always remember: the longer they stay, the bigger your paycheck will be. Good luck!

4

Sign up as an affiliate. Companies use affiliate programs to boost their online sales, and most of these affiliate programs are free to join. Every time a visitor buys an item through the affiliate link on your website, you earn affiliate commission.

What if you do not know what to do to get started? I'd like to make a money-earning website but I have no idea how to!

wikiHow Contributor

Focus on what you're good at. What interests you, what do you enjoy? If there's something you've always loved that has any possibility of a commercial link (and in this day and age, even water has been commercialized), then build upon that and help others to find your info/webpage/blog/ebook. You really can do anything, but you can't just blag it, you have to stay true and honest to what is possible for yourself and your enthusiasm will only come across if you're genuinely into that interest.

Yes, but the quality would be not as good as a paid one. Moreover, you need a domain, but if you have a good website with ads, you will have a good income and some of the money you use on it will bounce back to you.

Each advertising platform has an input (the advertisers [those paying for there content to be advertised]) and an output (monetizers[those who get paid for putting ads on there blog/website/game/product]). Advertisers say let's create an ad and it has something like $0.5/Click and when someone clicks on the ad, the monetizer will get paid.

Can I click the Google ads from my computer many times and earn money?

wikiHow Contributor

No, Google tracks your IP address, and under their terms and conditions, you, the owner of the site, cannot click on the ads. If you do, there is a high possibility they will shut your Adsense account down permanently.

You need to buy a domain but the cost depends on domain provider. If you are buying a package, then you will get a domain for free but you have to pay for product like WordPress or website builder with that domain.

I want to make website of online classes related to aptitude, maths, science etc. What do I need to do?

wikiHow Contributor

If you know code, you can develop an entire set of modules and interactive features from scratch. Or, you can create a simple website with embeds of calculators, etc., but it won't be as original or hands-on. If you don't know code, it's recommended that you plan on paper exactly what sort of site you'd like to exist, then seek help from a good website developer able to bring all this to life for you.